Sunday, June 3, 2018

Affiliate Marketing vs Blog Marketing

Affiliate Marketing vs Blog Marketing
by Jacob Malewitz
A Fan of John O'Hara Fiction


What is Wordpress Themes vs Blogger Themes? What is the idea of writing and marketing? Who is a win of Thebes in the philosophy of wonders? Where do you buy blogs at? What is affiliate marketing, what is the win of it?

Directly, you have affiliate marketing for economics platform? Red or up? Down or blue?

Directly, you have blog marketing for google, to run em, to steal money, and to not be used by your host? Blue or a win of red? Economics, yes.

During the war of Ali and Tyson in the 1990s, youd see economics collapse, cataclysm of boxing and television, and radio winning. What is the win? Who is better, Ali with his money. Tyson with his gun and shoes on the street, or ali taking the bus to downtown cities. Ali is money, and tyson makes it and doesn't want it. Blogging, you see similar things. Your hot blog wins money directly but you dont know if you get all; that's tyson. He's in the orange: Wants to win on blog marketing.

What's ali? He's affiliate marketing? What's the win of this? Who's better at boxing? Who's better at blog marketing? Who's faster, who makes more money, who gets more advertisements, and who stays in the Pro Blogger Theme set when Lifehacker is there? Fight, whoops, Lifehacker and its hacks won.

Stephen king or blogging? For me, blogging. Try blogging and winning. Blog marketing makes more money for pro blogger, so maybe they win. Directly, you can win more money blogging than doing anything else directly, other than, on dividends, wear a jacket. Blog marketing is a win of two worlds, of idea, of writing, of a guy in a castle writing novels, articles, books, and trying to win the next kingdom. What is the win of it? Is it just money? Do you want art?

Direct income and the idea of red line on the jacket, the house, the car, the motorcyle, your stack of literary novels, or your Gardner Dozois hot bible for the science fiction world. Can you win money blogging? Can you win money painting? Are you going to be Jackson Pollack or should you be Stephen King? What is the win of direct blogging? Blog marketing? A lot of example, huh?

Affiliate marketing should be tagged with blog marketing: use both? Volume, you might win with affiliate marketing. You can sometimes make more money here, but if Wordpress makes you 100,000 and blogger wins you 2,000, what can you do? Affiliate marketing ideals winning ad sales and wins with rich egyptians on dark streets.

Where do you run?

Jog to the park. Drinks some coffee. Have a five book in fest, buy expensive clothing, throw 30 shirts, and buy the next guru. Idea: Trouble yourself with this another day.



The Fort by Jacob Malewitz, a short story

The Fort
By Jacob Malewitz
A Fan of F. Scott Fitzgerald, literary noir

It started as a series of screams, a big man beating on small women. “Stop! Please Sto—“ And another hit, a slap, a scream, a whimper, “I am going to kill you one day,” were the last, rushed words, but Bill wasn’t sure who said it, quite odd to have screams mingled with threats, inaudible aggression and pain. He heard it, Bill Day, or B, and he felt in the resolve to stop the screaming … one day. How?
And he had heard it one too many nights. Beatings. Blood. ‘Screwing’ with a purpose. He asked himself on such days, what would he do, if he was big, strong, mean, and good with the switchblade his father had given him? Would he still run? Would he ever stop running? The switchblade played on his senses: the power of it made him smile, but it was dull … a useless blade. He heard the sounds of screwing downstairs; again, Steve had won. “To the victor,” B said, drawing the blade back in, touching the tip, a small speck of blood still on it when he had pretended to slit his wrists to get a few days off from school. They never found the blade; he made sure; and the blood was a joke; he wanted attention. “Go the spoils,” he said, closing his eyes while opening his mind to all the things he could do to end Steve, to make the pain stop.
He walked downstairs six hours later, waiting for his mother to take him to David’s house. He tripped on his books while going down the stairs, almost fell downward in a vicious spiral. He looked quite the part, with his thick glasses and the pen he always kept inside for poetry. He liked war poetry, he liked Churchill, he read history. “Quit living in the past,” mom would always say.
“Ready, mom?”
“As always.” She came out with only a bra on, pulling the shirt downward, slow enough so he could see the new bruise. He noticed her breasts, which were why men liked her, in some sense, why she drew them to her like a cat in heat. “As always,” she said, downing the rest of coffee setting on the wood dining room table.
“Are you trying to show the pain,” he said quietly, and then thought twice, pulled out his small notebook, and wrote down that exact mumble in letters few would ever be able to read … except B, war poet.
Summer arrived a few weeks ago. He was slow at school anyways. One day, he had punched his best friend David in the face over a soccer game; things seemed never quite the same between them, nor was school ever the adventure again; violence always changed things.
“Did he beat you up again, mom?” but he didn’t say that. Couldn’t say that! No, that would get a slap in the face and tears and smiles. He loves me, she would say, and I am just trying to save the (false) relationship. She hated being alone.
“I am leaving him, if that’s what you’re thinking.”
“Aga—“ but he stopped. ‘Again’ wouldn’t work; never tell a smoker to stop smoking, a teacher you cheated, a cute girl you’ve got a crush. Avoid.
“Good, mom. I love you,” and he gave her a hug, feeling against her large breasts which made him quite uncomfortable, quite disturbed. B could see why all his friends were, whether they knew it or not, his friends. His mom was hot. Fact.
B was 14. He had a switchblade.
The drive over to David’s home in the brown rust-bucket van made B miserable; he really didn’t like David anymore, nor did he like his parents, who seemed easy to second and third guess you, and who didn’t like the fact B had beaten up on their son. Nevertheless, it ended up being safer than his home, for something dark lived there which stopped only to screw and drink.
“Hi, David,” he said a few minutes later, waving back at his mom who always made sure he did wave. It was a secret: the waving meant something else, a goodbye that would happen. He was a grown boy, and soon he would stop waving. For now, he waved.
“Hey there, B.” David had a bowl of cereal in his hand, talking through cheerios and 2 percent milk. “Soccer?”
“In the park,” B replied.
“In the park,” David agreed. “I hate my back yard.”
“Hate mine too; lots of weird animals.”
“You’re joking.”
“No, really, I hear rustling out there sometimes. Or a big one trying to kill a small one.”
“Come on in.” And when they were seated, and Pokemon was playing on the tube for David’s brother Johnny, whose eyes seemed to never waver from the TV, David brought up the mystery they would be following for the next weeks.
“It’s not animals,” said David, “it’s not a monster or anything.”
“What if it is a monster, David?”
“Shutup, Johnny … Anyways, it’s the gang, triad dragons, they like to roam around back yards, check the locks on any bikes, find useful stuff.”
“Triad dragons?”
“You know what a gang is?” David said, swallowing more cheerios.
“Ya.”
“Same thing, ‘cept these guys are—“
“Bad.” Johnny said.
“Shut your damn mouth.”
“David watch the lip,” it was his David’s father. Chris Peters, who was in the kitchen eating his breakfast while he read the paper; B didn’t even have to look; he knew.
“Let’s go to the park,” B let out. When David finished downing a second bowl of Cheerios, they began walking the four block trek to the park, which held basketball courts where both gang members and old guys who thought they were good played, occasionally allowing someone young to play; there was the woods in the far back, holding secrets David and B later found; there was a soccer field, a few slides, several swings. Safe.
David always walked oddly, dragging one foot behind him, breathing heavy like a smoker would, always moving his hands back and forth in stride with his walking; combined, you wouldn’t think him a star athlete; he was.
B knew how it usually went. They would kick the soccer ball back and forth, naming each kick with a cool name. “Rocket kick!” “Dragon kick!” They would yell until the names became “Rocket kick two!” and then they usually stopped, their imaginations tapped.
“My mom’s going to leave him, said so.”
David kept walking as they closed in.
“She ever fight back?”
“I hope to God she doesn’t.”
“Why?”
“Because I would have to kill Steve.”
B walked more like a hood, learning that from the brother who ran away and went into the military. He always walked like it was an art form, knowing when to send signals out. “I really hate that fucker.”
“Just don’t do anything stupid.”
“Like fight back?” they were close in some ways, distant in others. But both knew what this alluded too. David had attacked him once: a fight born out of one popular kid befriending David and telling him to attack B after he scored in a soccer game; it happened and it changed them.
B looked back to the woods. “Ever go back there.”
“It’s weird back there. Think they’re actually some animals or something. ‘Sides, the tracks are ruled by the gang, and that’s close.”
“Screw it; let’s go.”
“I don’t think so.”
“Afraid, Dave?”
“Fuck you.” Once on the outskirts of the small place which would become the fort, B saw potential, but it wasn’t until halfway into the small place he found the reason they were there. The woods were on a slope, where ravines ran through the maze of trees and brush; upward was a street. They walked into it, looking for soft spots, places to explore in the shaded darkness. B stopped, looking ten feet ahead. A dog, its eyes closed, not breathing—a golden retriever which had passed on. “What the hell.” David looked down at the dog. “This is getting weird; we should go.”
“No.”
“B, what are you crazy? Something killed the dog.”
“Nothing killed the dog.”
“How can you be so sure?”
“There is no blood.”
“It doesn’t look old, B.”
“No, it doesn’t.” He walked to it, poked it with a stick, and proceeded to roll it over, showing a disgusting pack of bugs clinging to it; it didn’t smell; it died recently.
“We have to bury it.”
#
#
“You got to be kidding, what the hell did your mom give you? She still smoking that hash?”
He gripped his fist, feeling the pulse of a boy ready to fight, willing to battle. “Don’t say that.”
“Well she used to sell—“ but David stopped, because Davey could see in B a reason for a small mistake; a mistake he wouldn’t regret. “Forget it. I am outa’ here.”
David walked away, and B didn’t say a word. By the time the red-headed boy was a good football field away, he stopped, turned back, his head up, his feet covering the ground a little faster.
They dug the hole never touching the dirt. They put the golden retriever, who offered no struggle, in the hole waiting for it to come back: it just didn’t compute—death. There, for several minutes, they merely stood and gaped at what they had done. What if they thought we killed it? B thought. What if they think I murdered the dog, some kind of satanic cult or … His hand pulled to his forehead, the sweat forming, for it was warm. He pulled out the small notebook, considering a poem on death, a poem fit for a war poet. But nothing came from it; he saw no reason to write about the dog; he had not witnessed its death nor did he see it as a tragedy. It happened.
“What now?”
“We build a fort to keep them away.”
“Keep who away?” David said, pulling at his hair, tossing the stick they’d use to bury the dog. “Dude, are you getting weird on me?”
“Let’s make a fort,” he said again, this time to himself. “Build a fort,” he said, his eyes returning to his forehead where there was less sweat; his eyes squinted back up to the sun. He looked hoping to see something.
David waited a few hopeful seconds for B to make sense, to no avail. “I guess we can build a fort … to keep them away.”
Mothers watch/with hope/as boys slave away/over nothing/but peace.
He wrote the words down in haste.
They walked to the back of the park, David hesitating with every step, unsure of what they were doing; B just took it all in, playing with ideas of poems, pretending to write sometimes too, to keep other things away. “We build it on the slope, in the woods.”
David smiled, saying in a hushed voice, “If you build it, they will come.” He laughed and followed in B’s wake. He repeated the phrase a few times; once, B looked back to him, smiling, and this caught David off guard; his eyes squinted a bit.
“So how do we build a fort on a slope?”
“Less a fort, more a place hard to get too.”
“Sticks.”
“What?” David said.
“We use sticks.”
“Sticks: I got plenty of those in my backyard.”
“Keep them away.” B pulled it all in; a war poet making a fortress for war. Something in the back of his mind yelled for action.
David mumbled a few words, picked up a stick, looking at the door to the fortress, or what would be the entrance. B pulled out his switchblade, David feigning surprise, his eyes opening a bit more. B sharpened the edge of the stick, jammed it into the ground, and looked back to David.
“What are you gonna—“ he stopped, noticing the marks deeper into the wooded area. There were red circles spray painted across the ground in three places. “We gotta go, dude.”
“Why?”
“Triad dragons.”
“I don’t care about some stupid gang.”
“They claimed this! It’s theirs.”
“This is a park.”
“And the triad dragons meet under the bridge, that’s like twenty seconds from here.”
“I don’t care,” B said, his eyes showing interest. His breathing heavy for a moment; he then noticed the sounds of cars and people above, less than twenty yards away, where the road and sidewalk were. He smiled. “Want to go check it out?”
“Let’s just build the stupid fort.”
“Scared?”
“Shut up.”
The building of a fort on an incline turned out to be easy. No one would come from the sides, nor would they come from above the fort. You needed to come dead on at the gate, where all the wooded openings were. B and David put sharp sticks at all the entrances; the point was warning: if they could slow you, you might give up. David mentioned a few times how easy it would be to just walk in. Yet there was only one entrance, via hopping on a log setting in a small stream, just a skip away from where the dog breathed its last breath. You could come up the traditional routes, but it would be tough.
They stopped. Not because they were done … because they heard sounds coming from beneath the bridge; the sound of the triad dragons forming up. B made his intentions simple. “I’m going down there.”
“We have a stupid fort, but I’m not dying today.”
“Then leave,” and for a moment, in David’s eyes, B saw the scared boy he had knocked senseless, the kid who took a good right hook while trying to be popular. In many ways, B still hated David, even though he struck the blow.
He continued walking, not because he was curious or angered. It wasn’t that he wanted to get beat up; he just had to see them, because the poetry of war called for it. There would be battles, or so he thought.
In ten seconds, he was half way, David on his heels.
“You are crazy! What do you think they’re gonna’ do? They kill people.”
“They don’t kill people,” he responded, getting a view of the railroad tracks at the same time. They approached the gang, who were standing in a circle, smoke rising into the air. B could smell the cheap cigarettes, and other things, the kind of drugs his mother once smoked.
“Please!” David whispered. “Please, bro, I don’t want a friend to die today.”
“I thought you hated me, like the other kids.”
“No one hates you; even if they did, what’s the point in going down there?”
“I am not sure; I just have to.” A small trail cut downward toward the railroad tracks, through brush. “It’s our fort.”
“It’s just a stupid—“ and David stopped in his tracks, looking toward the three triad dragons walking their way. The look in his eyes was one of fear coupled with anger; combined, they made him take a few quick steps back.
“Go back to the fort,” said B, “just go now.”
David turned back, and in his rush to run back to the fortress he tripped on a rock. B heard him curse. David wiped the blood off his chin, sprinting away to the fort. For some reason, B thought that was the safest place to be, but not the place for him.
“Hiyo, Silver.” The triad dragons all had shaved heads, reminiscent of Neo-Nazis, or so was B’s first thought. There were a few Asians, a few blacks, a few whites, one so far away that he looked latino to B, or perhaps another white kid. “Kid, you think this is a fun place to hang out? Wait to you get a load of us.” He saw the blade out; another had a baseball bat; the rest appeared unarmed, or at least didn’t have weapons in their hands. They had no competition: B knew of no other gangs except on the west side of the city.
“Hi.”
“Uh, hi ain’t gonna cut it,” said one, who appeared to be the leader. His switchblade reminded B he had one too, but there was no way to beat them. That wasn’t the plan.
An Asian he remembered: this boy used to hang out with his brother, Peter, who had been, it was said by his mom and his unruly father, wild. The wildness of this triad dragon stood out. Something changed in his eyes; the switchblade pulled back; the triad dragon gave a good look to B. “You gotta be kiddin’! That you, little B?”
His brother had given him the name, saying that it was the first letter Bill could say, the first letter he could write down legibly. “Ya,” and he felt a series of emotions over him: missed his brother; missed the life he once had; missed having real friends before it all stopped. “Ya, I’m B.”
“Dude, you were this small,” he said, holding his hand to his waist, “The last time I saw you. This small!”
“I guess growing happens to all of us.”
“Right, you don’t remember me, do you?”
“No.”
“Mike Tran.”
“Mike Tran,” B said, repeating it to himself.
“What, you like the name?”
“I remember it. My brother sat next to you in middle school; you got into a fight with him.”
“Girls, my man, girls got in the way.” Mike stepped forward, his eyes locking with B’s. Perhaps he saw something there that no one else could, for he said a few words that made B look down. “I remember why he left: the boyfriend.”
“The boyfriend.”
“Steve was his name.”
“Steve is his name.”
“Right.” Mike nodded to his fellow triad dragons, walking back with B toward the dirt path away from the railroad tracks. “This isn’t a good place to be.”
“I’m not afraid.”
“See that, but it’s still not smart. These guys are cool, I’m with ‘em, get me, but not forever.”
“I get it.” He wiped a stand of hair from his eyes, looking right into Mike’s. “I need a favor.”
“Ask it.”
“I built a fort over on the slope.”
“A fort?”
“A fort. And I want to be able to go there.”
“For what?”
“I don’t know,” B responded, looking down. “I don’t know.”
B followed Mike’s eyes toward the switchblade in his pocket, too big really to be hidden forever, and he thought it was early on to show he was armed.
“You ever play golf, B?”
“Hate it.”
“Stay here.” Mike walked pack to the pack of gang members, taking a drag on a cigarette or something quite like a cigarette; then he grabbed a long metal rod, which, when B saw more of, turned out to be a golf club.
When Mike Tran was back, he handed the club over to B. “Don’t just swing, they say, swing hard. Now that switch’ is nice, sure, but you don’t want to kill the guy. You want to beat on ‘em; even we don’t kill; we just beat up; it’s a fine art.”
“My brother … did he try to kill him?”
“I’m not sure; if he did, he failed.” Mike pulled out a pack of cigarettes, a set of matches, and a piece of paper. “Now, this isn’t gonna’ go down. You don’t go out there and attack him. You call me, see, call me before you do a single thing. Then, we handle it. Only use the golf club if you have to … only.”
The paper went into B’s hands, the golf club he held tight, his eyes staying lowered to the ground. He nodded, mumbled a thank-you, and walked back to the fort. David, actually, was sitting in the most defensible spot, the place where no one could get; it was like a keep with solid trees covering all the angles, and the loads of stones easy to throw. A good defense/means offense/and offense/means attack. They didn’t speak.
#
The car was parked not too far away, a beacon in the darkness as nothing else seemed moving. Its lights were on; its passenger smoked a cigarette, the window letting in the cool air, which mingled with the smoke only to be pushed back by heavy breathing. It was as if B could feel Steve’s presence. The big, bulky 300 pounder could easily take on B anytime he wanted. For some reason he never touched him; maybe he saw something else in B’s eyes … a warning. The fort was the beginning, a small book written down, a few poems scribbled while hiding there. There was more to the poems, more to the fort, than B could ever quite understand. It seemed to be his last stand against the world. A pen in his hand, sitting in his room with the lights dimmed and the pages ready for action … no one could touch him. It wasn’t the last stand; it wouldn’t be; it couldn’t be.
He heard his mom on the phone downstairs, chatting with someone about how Steve was stalking her. Her emotions were high, her voices being sent up the stairs.
“I won’t call the police, okay, so just stop … No, I am not going to. I don’t need to tell you why.” There was a pause. B wasn’t sure whether it was grandma or Christine, whether someone was trying to talk sense in his mom. It didn’t matter.
He was upstairs, thinking of the fort, writing down verse, when it all began. He sat there, looking out the window toward chaos, his fingers tight on the golf club.
“He is crazy, all right! I admit it! Just leave me alone, I wish you all would just leave me alone—“and the phone slammed on the wooden dining room table, the sob of mom being broken. He tightened his fingers around the golf club, sat up, and did exactly what Mike had told him not to.
Going down the stairs was the hard part—sneaking past his mom’s eyes, not surprising her, and she was scared, and she would hear him, stop him. Walking out the door turned out to be easy. B ran toward the car, its front lights striking his eyes. Hitting the windshield with a seven iron golf club, specially made for pounding people, places, and things, was easy.

FIN



Champions, Chapter 1, by Jacob Malewitz

Champions Chapter 1
by Jacob Malewitz
F. Scott Fitzgerald Fan

Prologue: Janus The Watcher
Janus was a man of Roman taste and Greek temperament.  He was Roman by blood, but had found that true greatness, for a god, lay in serving the deities of Greece.  Zeus initially had proposed the idea of using Janus—the Roman opener of gateways—to create a Pantheon on the mountain of Olympus.  It would  be a process, a trial and error test of things, to gather all the greats of history into one place.
So Janus assembled almost all the greatest warriors of humanity existence in order to fight in the Pantheon.  His job had been given to him by Zeus; yet he was sure that Aries and Athena and El had each played parts.
The game was simple but the rules these heroes and generals lived by was different. The fact that all the generals couldn’t fight with a blade wasn’t a surprise.  The surprise was which ones, as you would think certain men would know how to fight—if you listened to the stories.
It was a simple foreword when you tried to explain to the warriors why they had been chosen.  Yet as the story progressed it became more difficult to explain the reason for the Pantheon.  These men had families, empires.  And amidst it all was a distrust of men they had sworn to fight.  The Greeks, like Pericles and Leonidas, were hated by the Persians; for the Greeks and Persians were mortal enemies, constantly at war.  
It was as clear that these were the days legends were to be born.  At first the fighters were cautious, they watched everyone else instead of focusing on the fight at hand.  Then certain among them stood out, rose above the rest.
Janus decided to take many warriors from different times.  From the medieval age came the Black Knight, who was exceptional with his sword.  From Africa during the second century BC came Hannibal.  Hannibal had the sharpest eyes, and used tactics to throw his opponents off before they even use their swords to strike at him.
So it became obvious that these were the two of the greatest warriors. The Black Knight, who kept his identity secret and fought with some unspoken form of honor; and Hannibal, a skilled general but an underrated one on one fighter.   The deities who watched the battles each quietly chose their champions, some siding with the advanced Black Knight while others thought Hannibal to be unbeatable.  
   Janus wanted to wait until the two champions would cross swords before he put his colors behind one of them.
   Then the Greeks stepped up. Pericles of Athens showed skills in narrowly losing to Hannibal.  Had Hannibal not launched his spear at Pericles in a quick strike across the Pantheon the outcome would have been much different.  Whilst Leonidas of the great city-state Sparta defeated every opponent who came at him.
   Zeus had his son Hercules enter the fights.  He came to a draw with the Black Knight after a certain amount of time passed with neither champion falling; and showed his mastery of the Greek style of fighting by defeating every hoplite who opposed him.
Janus had his eyes on other people: warriors several millennium ahead in time.  He knew humanity continued to create warriors who developed different skills as new technologies were found.  He had so many choices.  At first he had focused on heroes and generals who had been written about by the great chroniclers of the Greek and Roman empires, as he was a Hellenistic god, but then it became apparent the writers of those peoples hadn’t recorded some of the better fighters to the West.
   It was clear to Janus that the warriors he had brought from all the expanses of the Earth were filling their roles well.  They made small talk between fights, and friendships were born.
   In one of the better battles of the Pantheon Hannibal and Hercules had fought like the titans of old.  Janus watched the battle with excitement, his adrenaline rushing just by gazing at them.  These two men were a study in contrasts.  Hercules was white. Hannibal black.  Hercules was muscular and slow.  Hannibal slim and quick on his feet.  While Hercules appeared to relish every battle Hannibal had seemed nervous in previous fights.  Still, both were undefeated in the Pantheon.
   Before the battle began Hercules declined to use a weapon to the chagrin of the weapons master; Hercules had declined weapons countless times—as he preferred to work with only his hands—and each time the weapons master for the Pantheon had thought it stupid.  “His luck will soon run out,” the weapons master had said prior to Hercules’ victory over a hoplite warrior.
   Hannibal decided to fight without a weapon so he would lose no honor.  Janus knew Hercules would have a great advantage in strength; but Hannibal would use his smarts and speed to win the fight. Hannibal was the best strategist of the ancient world.  He had followings all across the Mediterranean…people who thought his exploits great enough to be written about.  
   As people began to trade bets—using swords and shields as most of them lacked coins—it became clear that without his weapon Hannibal would be a long shot. Janus’ mind told him Hannibal would lose to the Greek hero; but his heart told him Hannibal would refuse to lose this match.  
   As the two warriors waited for the Pantheon Headmaster to begin the fight,Janus continued to think the two warriors an odd match.
   The expressions on their faces alone could fill a canvas.
   And then the Headmaster held up his hand and the fight was on.  Like two wolves seeing a fresh kill the two warriors circled each other, drawing closer and closer with each step.  Hercules didn’t show anything to Hannibal.  Janus knew how Hannibal fought, as did Hercules, it seemed.  The tactician would break him down if he did.  As the two warriors circled the Pantheon’s arena Hannibal began to throw bits of sand at Hercules—trying to anger him with cheap tactics.  It did nothing to Hercules’ resolve, though he did seem annoyed. Then Hannibal picked up his walking pace—almost to a light jog—and tore off his armor and started to run in circle around Hercules.  Hercules took his chances and tried to hit Hannibal with his fist, but missed.
   Hannibal took advantage of the move—which exposed Hercules side—and sent his leg into Hercules gut.  Hercules didn’t even flinch.  No pain was evident and he threw another blow that almost knocked Hannibal off his feat.
   Hercules smiled, his first show of emotion, and began to speak, but Janus couldn’t hear him.  Hannibal grabbed a fistful of sand and was about to throw it when Hercules ran straight into him.  Hannibal tried to avoid Hercules body but when they collided he was knocked over.
   Janus thought the fight was over.  Hannibal had been hit hard and there was no way he could steal a victory here.  He thought he would have won had Hercules used a weapon, as it would have negated Hercules strength.
   But as it was Hannibal was going to lose.  He pushed himself off the ground, spit some blood onto the dirt, and then approached Hercules again with a renewed vigor.
   He doesn’t stand a chance.
   Hannibal held his hands out and said a few words to Hercules.  He stepped back, then ran towards Hercules.  Hercules fist shot out into the air like an arrow and nearly connected, but when the blow missed Hannibal saw his chance.  He put his two fists together and they came down on Hercules head.
   Hercules stepped back, then hit the ground.  Hannibal circled the hero and then jabbed him with his leg into his neck.  Hercules grimaced in pain.  Hannibal jumped on him and pounded against Hercules’ face until he was out cold.
   He didn’t raise his hands in the air as befitted a champion, didn’t gloat. he merely looked to the sky, to whatever god he believed in, and said a few words.
   The fight was over.  Hercules was knocked out and Hannibal was bloodied.  Hannibal had done what few men could--he had taken out a hero of the highest degree.  Janus hadn’t thought Hannibal could do it; he even had considered placing a bet against him.  But something about Hannibal’s eyes made him hesitate.  So dark; and they reflected the sunlight like a mirror.  And then his skin seemed hardened by days in the sun: it was a combination of tan and black.  He wasn’t muscular in the way the befitted a warrior; more he was a soldier in how he walked and positioned himself.  It would be easy to underestimate a man of Hannibal’s stature if you didn’t know who he was.  He was a Carthaginian of the first order.  
   Janus looked to Zues, who seemed upset by his son’s loss.  At his heart Zeus was more of a fan of the tools used in war than war itself; war was something for Aries to focus on.  Zeus swung a different way, and Janus knew Zeus would get over his son’s defeat; Hercules would fight again; but it was Hannibal who had a chance of being the next champion of the Pantheon.
   Janus had other thoughts on his mind.  This master of gateways saw potential in Hannibal; but that didn’t negate the simple fact of life, that there is always someone better.  Janus hoped that the next group of warriors might raise the stakes of the game.  There was the Roman named Trajan; and then there was the fighter who didn’t even know his skills, named Johnny McGavin.

CH. Trajan’s Call
   Trajan was a figure without comparison, but his greatness was overshadowed by Caesar for most of his lifetime.  He was the first emperor of Rome to not be Italian, but what really made him stand out was the way he waged war.  He was an ambitious lion on the battlefield, too hungry to not enter the fray.  And he had risen fast because of his ambitions; ambition was what Rome thrived on.
   So he became a soldier of the highest order, a man amongst shadows of men.  Rome was growing sick with decadence; yet it was still as powerful as it was in the Punic Wars against Carthage.  Its roads expanded more land with every day; only problem was less and less Romans came out to defend the glory of Rome.
   But Trajan was always ready to defend Rome.  But that in itself was a case in point.  Without a strong emperor how would the republic hold?
   Trajan stayed away from the politics that was tearing Rome apart.  The only way Rome could retain its greatness, he thought, was to continue to expand the reaches of the empire.  To fight until there was no one left to fight; and to build like there was no tomorrow.
   His first campaign as emperor was an expedition to quell unrest in the rich lands of Syria.  There he had found a wife—a woman of exceptional character and talents—and there he had found that if he fought next to his men they would fight like the gods themselves.
   Greece was his next stop.  He didn’t believe in gods, but it was said anyone who wanted to become leader of the republic had to consult with the Delphi in order to have a vision of empire.  The event came and went, like a tide, and only left him with more questions than answers.  He was sure the mystics were lying to him when they had said he would enter a second world, a place outside of this reality.
   After it he went to Rome and grew sick.  For months he was like this; he became almost helpless; yet his wife stayed with him through the sickness, and when his health returned to him he sought out battles.
   And on the lands of Gaul he thought he could find the glory men like Caesar had found.

   Trajan had been scouting in the woods of Gaul with two of his Praetorian guards when they heard noises of men coming close to them.  They were obviously drunk as they were yelling loudly; but that didn’t make them any less dangerous.  Trajan had to use his instincts to tell him where the attack would come from.  He heard footsteps in the distance.  He put his ears to the ground and recognized about twenty men coming their way.
   He signaled silence from his two praetorian guards, then told them to hit the dirt.  He wanted them to think there was only one Roman here.
   If they had known whom they were fighting these Gauls might have turned back right where they came from.  But Trajan looked like a regular soldier—chest plate shielding his body; studded iron helmet; gladius blade; and two javelins—rather than the emperor that he was.  His captains had told him that he shouldn’t go on scouting missions with only two guards, they wanted at least a century to go with him, yet he knew if he had done that they would have left traces that they had been there; and it was vital that they held the element of surprise.  If the Gauls knew three roman legions were in the area they would likely retreat and try to sweep around onto the supply line; at least that’s what Trajan would have done.  He made it his business to stay a few moves ahead of his opponent, and if he could do that victory was that much closer.
   When Trajan saw them within twenty meters of his position he made it known that he was there by banging the edge of his blade against his armor.  The Gauls all stopped and started whispering to each other.  Trajan didn’t know the language that these warriors spoke, but he could sense they smelled blood, they wanted to fight; and that’s just what Trajan wanted as well.
   The first move came from the Gauls as they spread out and encircled him.  They were making sure Trajan didn’t have a route of escape.
   They must think me mad for not running.
   He was very confident.  He planned out the battle in a way that would give him an advantage.  He had the Praetorians, the best soldiers Rome could muster; and he knew that without them he couldn’t win this fight.
   They slowly stepped closer, waiting for Trajan to run—but he never did.  Trajan held off a smile; he was going to take them all down; and that would be one less raiding party to disrupt his supply lines.  The Gauls weren’t strong in direct attacks, they lived off hitting and running.
   One of the Gauls didn’t think Trajan had seen him out of the corner of his eye. He tried to sneak up behind the emperor.  Trajan waited for just the right moment then rested his hand on his javelin, turned around, and threw it into the head of the Gaul standing a mere ten feet away. The Gaul lost all control over his body and hit the ground.  The others, not surprised by this, continued to close the distance with Trajan.  He grasped his other javelin and threw it at the man he thought was the leader; he hoped that by taking this man out the others might not immediately retreat when the Praetorians showed themselves.
   The javelin pierced the Gaul leader’s chest, he groaned in agony and fell to the ground.  Trajan signaled and the two hiding Praetorians jumped up; each had a javelin ready and threw them towards a pack of Gauls.  Two more Gauls were hit in their chests and fell quickly to the ground.  Four down.  The others showed courage and charged the Romans.  Two more javelins were thrown by the Praetorians one striking a Gaul in the leg and the other narrowly missing another.
   Trajan realized that they couldn’t be allowed to retreat and give the rest of the Gauls news of the arrival of the Roman army.  He knew if that happened his plan to surprise them would be gone.  So with fury he charged into the heart of the group, blade in hand.  “Emperor!” One of the Praetorians sworn to protect him yelled out.  “Emperor this is not the time for heroics!”  The Praetorians charged to his sides watching his flanks as he cut down Gaul after Gaul.  He used his blade skillfully, but the Gauls never wavered.
He saw one of his Praetorians fall and then killed before he could do anything about it.  This obviously disturbed the other Praetorian and he rushed to Trajan’s other side and decaptitated the Gaul.  Just then, right when Trajan’s survival was in jeopardy, he heard a sound he had never heard before; and saw a light he had never seen before.  Whatever it was he dropped his blade.  The second Praetorians looked at him then at the light.  Trajan looked back to the second Praetorian as the light washed over him.
   It was like he was being pulled through time in some mystical gateway.  He didn’t believe in visions or in dreams pointing to things in life; what he believed in was that men believed in what they needed to believe in.  And he didn’t waste his time on such thoughts.  But the moment the light enveloped him he began to wonder if he was being punished for his pagan views on the world.